The Rabbit Personality

Contents

Rabbit Characteristics

Scientific Name

Sylvilagus

Collective Term

A gambol of rabbits

Rabbit Characteristics

Small to medium size

Gentle

Cute

Faithful

Passionate

Impatient

Scientific Name

Sylvilagus

Collective Term

A gambol of rabbits

Rabbit personalities are small, gentle individuals with a tendency towards shyness and whose instinct is to run at the first sign of danger. Their extraordinarily acute senses are well-developed and always on the lookout for any impending peril.

Rabbits are astoundingly cute and rely heavily on their soft personalities and vulnerable appearance to succeed.

Rabbit Personalities can be Quirky

These beautiful and skittish creatures have the most elegant imaginations of all; spending hours creating magnificent castles in air and populating them with an endless variety of whimsically pastoral characters. These romantic dreams dramatically influence the cottontail's behavior, and although they could be described as quirky, they're also friendly, warm, and understanding.

Although they are bright, cottontails often hide their intelligence when it interferes with their primary method of survival: cuteness! Almost all mammal personalities find them to be irresistibly attractive and they rarely need to employ their personal resources to succeed in their careers or relationships.

Rabbit Personalities are Socially Adept

Their quiet, solitary behavior is often mistaken for timidness, but cottontails are actually quite aggressive in their search for resources.

Because they lack the physical strength of larger animal personalities, they must rely on their social skills to compete in the workplace.

Rabbits function best in situations that don't involve confrontations, which means they are not natural salespeople, but their ability to work with others means they are well-suited for careers in customer support, diplomacy, administrative work and nursing.

Rabbits in the Wild

The cottontail is a small rabbit that varies in color from a reddish-brown to dark gray. They are abundant throughout the world and particularly favor brush-covered woodland.

As an herbivore, the cottontail faces a difficult problem in digesting the coarse twigs and grass that makes up its diet. Unlike other grazing animals, such as goats and sheep which can chew their cud, the cottontail must pass the food through its digestive system twice to ensure complete digestion.

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Careers & Hobbies

Diplomat

Nursing

Actor

Advertising

Hiking

Flirting

Volunteering

Camping

Love & Friendship

The rabbit can be impossibly cute. And while its gentle nature makes for a kind and thoughtful partner, its propensity to follow-the-leader makes for something of a lackluster lover. Unbridled passion might be the cottontail's promise, but its tendency to go with the flow makes this bunny's love life predictable and submissive.

Why do people love rabbits so much? Perhaps because they put the feelings of others before their own. As its refuge and sanctuary, the rabbit's partner always comes first -- even before children and siblings. But this doesn't mean that rabbits are desperate for a mate, for they choose their partners deliberately and carefully.

But what is this annoying cottontail habit of leaping into bad relationships? It's the rabbit curse that draws them irresistibly towards stronger animal personalities who seem to offer the security they crave. But these relationships are ultimately disastrous, as Monica Lewinsky learned after she discovered the teeth of a wolf.

Bats and foxes are too spiritual for this practical animal and long-term relationships are best with fellow herbivores who share the rabbit's familial spirit, like deer, prairie dogs, and beavers. But it is marriage to the passive sheep that proves to be its best bet in the long run.